flame by richard burgin
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Flame
by Richard Burgin
7507 Byron Place, 1st Floor
St. Louis, MO 63105
314-324-3351
richardburgin@att.net
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Flame
by Richard Burgin
Once more I told the man behind the counter at St. Louis Bread Company (who
has only waited on me a handful of times in the last few years) that he has an excellent
memory when he called me by my correct first name. He smiled such a beaming, angelic
smile you’d think it was Christmas morning and he was 8 years old. It will be the
happiest I’ll make anybody today, I thought wistfully.
I had just come from the UPS store where Simone works. Despite her name,
Simone looks exactly like a young Simon to me (about the same age as the counter man
at the Bread Company, and almost as masculine). However, Simone is almost certainly a
work in progress. There are still no signs of breasts beneath her black UPS uniform shirt
and her face and short hair make her look like a young man. Yet, last time I noticed how
hairless her arms are. For someone with medium brown hair this almost certainly means
that they were shaved. I thought of my father’s proverb “great distances begin with small
steps.” How he would loathe what I’m doing. I hadn’t even told him I’d left my job (he’s
a man who’d rather die than stop working), much less anything about Simone.
Whenever I’m in the store it’s difficult to keep my eyes off Simone. I’m always
mildly disturbed by this, but continue to watch her as much as I can without her realizing
it. I know this is maddeningly bourgeois, even vulgar behavior yet I can’t seem to stop it.
It’s become one of the ways I continue to disappoint myself.
Finally, I left the UPS store and went to Walgreens, which is just off the mall.
There are a number of people I look at there, plus the cashier nearest the door always
welcomes me in a friendly way. She has a smile worth preserving too, though not in the
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way Simone’s is. One might wonder how I have the time to go to so many stores in the
middle of the day, in the middle of the week? It’s because I retired—much earlier than I
should have perhaps, or so my colleagues at the office kept telling me. But I did it
because it was what I always told myself I’d do if I ever got any money and so when the
money came it was as if it were expected of me. Maybe if I’d enjoyed the office, or the
company of my coworkers, I wouldn’t have left so suddenly but it had reached the point
(some time ago actually) where it was a burden to even pretend to care about them. My
smiles in the office were definitely not worth preserving, neither was anything I said or
did. I was little more than a worker zombie numbly moving through my programmed
day. If I must be reduced to a monster let me be a vampire instead—society’s latest
monster of choice, that it seems endlessly fascinated by. Vampires are everything
zombies aren’t—sleek, aggressive, dangerously attractive, compelling. Too much to
aspire for probably, but then again I’d never know unless I retired. As long as I work in
an office like mine, I thought, I’m doomed to be an uninteresting lethargic monster,
simply taking up space.
* * *
I dreamed about Simone’s arms last night. I was looking at them in the UPS store
but this time she saw what I was doing and showed me a smile of great mystery. The next
thing I knew we were in one of the rooms of my parent’s house. Then I woke up, walked
into the living room, lit a candle, and stared long and hard at the flame. My finger was
very close to it but I didn’t burn it.
* * *
I washed myself very thoroughly that morning while I wondered where I would
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go during my morning hours, which are usually the most difficult ones to get through
unless one also counts the afternoon. In my private sense of justice I think if you can get
through a morning you ought to get credit for the afternoon too. Since I rarely drive
except when there’s an emergency—I just became too anxious about it—my options are
sometimes quite limited. Really this would be an ideal time to read but my interest in
reading has also mysteriously evaporated these last few years. After awhile, you tire of
reading about humanity and you want to interact with it in a way that produces some
change, if only in one or two people (although of all the people I know, only Simone is
really trying to change).
I still have my love of music because it alone (except for some very great
paintings) can express what is otherwise inexpressible in life and yet I have to be careful
not to listen too often because it stirs up emotions that are better left alone. I mean
memories of my childhood, so full of secrets, (though I’ve always had secrets and
sometimes think I can’t relax without one) and memories of my lost loves—generally lost
because I ruined them. Sometimes I think the money I got is like reparations for all the
relationships I’ve ruined. Magical thinking, I know, but one can’t always control one’s
thoughts.
That night I spent almost an hour staring at the candle again, feeling its heat near
the tips of my fingers.
* * *
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“Can I help you sir?”
“Do you want to waive the signature?”
“Oh, I’m sorry sir. What it means is, do you want to leave the package at the
premises if there is no one there to sign for it?”
“Is it a business or residence?”
“No, sir. My shift ends at five o’clock but the store stays open till seven.”
These were the precious words my Simone said to me this week.
* * *
Did I question what I was doing? Of course I did but I felt driven by a vision, as I
hadn’t been for a long time, which made me feel young again in a way that was
ultimately irresistible.
Probably because we only talked in short spurts in the UPS store, our
conversation never transcended the mundane. Yet, that was quite enough to provide those
ineffable glimpses into her nature (her slightly forced pleasantness, for instance, with its
attendant hinting at her secret pain, that alternated with her surprisingly self-confident
presentation of self—as if she’d just gotten an “A” in a public speaking course. I also
made a point of finding reasons to stay in the store where I could overhear her talking
with other customers. I was surprised to discover how much I resented them. Once, I
even heard a private conversation on her cell phone. I was completely blindsided! That
there where people in her life, friends, perhaps even a lover who could call her at work
and succeed in getting her to talk to them was…infuriating! It upset me so much that I
couldn’t really hear what she was saying, only snippets of it. Yet this fragmented, in
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many ways, horrifying experience ended up contributing to my general state of
knowledge about her. It also made me understand that for there to be any progress in
whatever I was pursuing I needed to see her outside her office, in fact, I needed to
somehow see her in my home.
* * *
It’s odd, in a mostly positive way, how we can respond to others, to life in
general, in a fresh way once we’re suddenly excited by just one person. Immediately after
realizing I wanted to get Simone to come to my condominium, I called Scrubby Dutch to
thoroughly clean it. Scrubby Dutch sends a cleaning crew of three women who work for
an hour in exchange for fifty dollars. Because they clean everywhere they wear faded
jeans and old shirts. In short, they look like homeless women. I tried to stay out of their
way in my computer room where I was monitoring my investments when I heard one of
the doors from the adjoining bathroom shut. It was open just long enough for me to see
which one of the three it was—the worst dressed one with dark brown, scraggily hair. I
stopped my work and listened to her pee. My close proximity obviously didn’t inhibit her
flow of urine. To my surprise, I soon got aroused, which I immediately realized stemmed
from my fascination with Simone and my plans for her. That was how my brain worked
in those days.
* * *
What do people do with money when it comes so suddenly it’s as if the wind blew
it their way? I was lucky—mine came from a trust fund while my parents were still alive.
Most people get theirs blown in by the winds of death. I was thinking these rather heavy
thoughts in my bed somewhere between 3 and 4 in the morning—having conceded
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another victory to my indefatigably persistent insomnia.
Ok, I thought, people travel. At first, a celebratory trip to Europe or at least to Las
Vegas. But I had become too anxious to travel just about the time my money arrived.
Then they buy a house—perhaps the house of their dreams—but I dreaded few things
more than shopping for a home and all that it involves with real estate agents and banks (I
did, however, slightly upgrade my condominium). Then the suddenly rich get a financial
advisor and start to plan how to make more money, but by nature, I’m not really equipped
to trust financial advisors. For better or worse, I handle my own investments myself.
Instead of taking a grand vacation or buying a grand home or car or financial
advisor, I used my money to retire. You’re way too young to retire everyone said, but I
did it anyway and haven’t regretted it so far—though admittedly it’s been less than a half
year since I willingly joined the ranks of the unemployed. I’m aware, however, that
there’s a certain emptiness of purpose in my current way of living or was until I
discovered Simone and realized very quickly after I began to focus on the situation that
my number one asset (besides a kind of cunning intelligence) was the money I now had.
The challenge was in the details, which made me realize I needed to do more research.
Back to the UPS store I went, always making sure Simone waited on me, that I
had a bonafide question to ask, and that if any opportunity arose I could ask her a
question about her life, even it if involved something as banal as asking where she lived
or how she got to work, so I could possibly offer her a ride home. I was sufficiently older
(and a long time trusted customer) that her suspicion level seemed minimal. I didn’t think
she’d notice, for example, that I often showed up close to the time when her shift ended.
That was the essence and beauty of her innocence.
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* * *
You have a pair of eyes but you don’t know what to do with them. You don’t
want to look behind yourself because there’s so much shame and disappointment in your
past. You need to look ahead but you need someone or something to make you do it. You
can’t help what that is—it selects you.
* * *
It was 5:03 when Simone came out of the store, and I was there to greet her.
“Good afternoon, sir,” she said with her typical, trained politeness.
“Hi Simone. Please call me Phillip.”
“I’m sorry, Phillip,” she said, nearly blushing. I noticed that her teeth were even
whiter than her arms.
“Simone, can I talk with you for just a minute?”
“Yes, sir, Phillip,” she said, as if covering all her bases. She stopped talking then
and looked at me with her hopeful hazel blue eyes without asking what it was about, as if
her manners had suddenly seized total control of the situation.
“Simone, you know my work makes me go to the UPS store a lot.”
She nodded, eyes still on me.
“Well, during those visits I couldn’t help observing how well you handle
customers and your job in general. You prepare packages efficiently and skillfully, you
fix the Xerox machines better than anyone else in the store, you use the computer
knowledgably, and you type accurately and quickly. In short, you have a lot of
impressive skills.”
“Thank you, sir,” she said, definitely blushing now.
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“No, no, call me Phillip or Phil. I don’t know anyone named “sir”.”
“Sorry Phillip.”
“That’s better,” I said. “Well, it so happens, as it often does because I always pick
good people, that my special assistant has just accepted a job with a Chicago based
corporation that pays more than I can and reluctantly, tearfully,” (I decided to add, being
a sucker for the hyperbolic touch), “she had to leave just before I could complete an
important project I’d been working on. Simone, what I’m hoping is that you might be
interested in helping me finish it as my temporary, special assistant.”
“Me?” she said, jabbing her titless chest just below her nametag with one of her
impeccably manicured fingers.
“But I have my job at UPS.”
“It won’t interfere with that. I just need your help now for a little while. You can
do the work at my office after your work at UPS ends, say an hour or two per day for a
week or so and I’ll triple what they pay you at UPS.”
“Really? I just hope I have the ability to...”
“You have the ability,” I said in my best, assertive businessman’s voice. “I’m
quite an experienced judge of talent and believe me you have the talent.”
“Thank you. Can I, may I think about it overnight?”
“Of course, Simone. Here’s a little bonus money up front to show you how
serious I am about this,” I said, while I watched her flush with ill concealed excitement as
I handed her two hundred dollar bills.
“Yours to keep,” I said. “No matter what you decide to do.”
“Oh I couldn’t,” she said, making hand contact with me for the first time as she
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tried to give it back.
“No, no, you have to take it or I’ll feel hurt, and very disappointed,” I said,
turning my hands into fists so I couldn’t take the money. I thought then, though perhaps I
imagined it, that her eyes were tearing up as she finally took it.
“You think it over and when I meet you tomorrow after work you can let me
know what you decide.”
* * *
Another close to sleepless night. I couldn’t stop picturing what it might look like.
First I’d picture what I’d have to do to get to see it, the words I’d have to say, the money
that would change hands, the alcohol we’d have to drink. Then I’d start picturing what
I’d finally get to see. There were many different pictures too because it was a great
mystery. In one I’d imagine it still there the size of a normal man’s, or even a well-
endowed man’s, only with the pubic hair shaved the way she shaved her arms. In another
I pictured it taped behind her like a kind of tail. In others, it was a little stub not quite
sculpted into a vagina, in others still she already had the beginnings of a clitoris. In the
next wave of pictures I began touching it, no matter what she had or didn’t have there—
that’s when I went to the kitchen, turned on the stove and forced myself to stare at the
flame.
There is nothing stronger or more perfect than a flame. Fire started the world and
fire in the form we call the sun will end it. Fire rules us, has absolute power over our life
and death. The sun may not be God but it’s certainly one of God’s most powerful agents.
A flame is but an image of God but that’s enough to met out human justice on this earth. I
reminded myself of all this as I held my finger less than an inch from it until the pictures
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of Simone slowly, slowly burned away.
* * *
You have a dream but you don’t know what to do with it, not wanting to look
either behind or ahead of yourself. My dream came in the morning just before the sun
woke me up. I was skating with my father on a frozen pond trying to catch up with him
and must have put too much pressure on the ice. I felt the cold water under the ice rising
up over my eyes just before I woke up.
* * *
I thought I’d left enough materials on my office desk for it to look convincing. I’d
gotten some boxes and a few other things from Office Depot the day before. There were
also a fairly large number of books in my home so I told her it was a book marketing
business—not that she seemed very curious about it. In her car I sat a more than polite
distance away from her. I was pleased that her conversation was reasonably relaxed.
“Thank you again for the opportunity,” she said, and I said, “Thank you.”
I live in a wealthy suburb where the poorest inhabitants would be upper middle
class almost anywhere else. Judging by her wide-eyed response I thought this wasn’t lost
on her. At last my money is paying off, I thought to myself. It allowed me to control my
aggression and project a relaxed, confident manner—qualities that women always find
appealing. Despite waiting so long for this, despite thinking about it so much and so
intensely, I was acting triumphantly low key. I thought now that I would suggest we have
a bite to eat before getting down to business. Thought we could go somewhere
unostentatiously classy like The Wine Bar, although I had a fear of sorts that the maitre’d
or waiter would address us as “you guys.” I suddenly wondered why Simone didn’t wear
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lipstick or any makeup for that matter! I wondered why her hair was so short (although it
was getting a little longer). Why not do one overtly feminine thing to help the general
public? Did she secretly revel in confusing them?
We’re having our first fight, I thought to myself, though oblivious to my thoughts
Simone was just then commenting on how lovely the weather had been lately—a warm
November after the coolest summer anyone in St. Louis could remember.
* * *
In The Wine Bar, Simone had two glasses of wine to accompany her veal
scaloppini and began to transform with very little coaxing from me.
“I’ve never done the kind of work I’m going to be doing for you, and I guess it’s
making me a little nervous,” she confessed before she downed her second drink.
You’ve never been a woman either, I thought, compared to which my job must be
pretty small potatoes as far as new experiences go. I didn’t say that, of course. What I
said was, “That’s why I brought you to The Wine Bar to get you relaxed a little. But I’m
not nervous about you. I know you can do the job. How does that wine taste by the way?”
“It’s very good.”
“I think I’ll have some too if that’s all right with you?”
“Of course, Phil,” she said, as I turned and looked for my waitress. It didn’t take
long before she materialized. I think the waitresses can smell it the moment when you
want a drink.
Later, Simone said, “Oh no I couldn’t,” covering her mouth suddenly with her
hand as if it were a sin to even dignify my question of whether she’d like a third drink,
with any kind of considered answer.
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“Oh sure you could,” I said. “You work very hard at the UPS store five days a
week.”
“Sometimes six.”
“Really?” I said in a shocked voice, although I’d memorized her schedule a long
time ago.
“Oh yes, every other Saturday I work there too.”
“Well, that doesn’t sound right. You deserve to live a little.”
“Am I doing all right?” she asked, her innocent gray blue eyes locking onto me.
“You’re doing fine,” I said, as I once more signaled to the waitress. So far, my
making the decisions was working out pretty well, I thought, as I felt some definite
stirrings inside me, something that only happened to me lately when I thought about
Simone.
When we got to my place Simone was definitely a little tipsy and so was I.
“Your place is so big and beautiful, and I love all the candles,” she said, pointing
to them as if she’d just spotted a rare animal at the zoo. My living room was entirely lit
by candles. As I suspected the orange light was quite flattering for Simone, who was
wearing a bright yellow shirt and her jeans.
“Thank you, Simone. Why don’t you sit down on the sofa and relax for a
minute?” I said earnestly enough.
She looked at me with a slightly confused expression before sitting down a little
awkwardly but still in an unassumingly charming way. I quickly sat beside her.
“So how are things in your life these days?”
My question appeared to have surprised her even more.
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“Oh, things are fine, I guess.”
“Things going along smoothly then?”
“Yes, mostly.”
“No changes of any note?”
“Well this new job you hired me for is a change. Can you tell me what I’d be
doing a bit more?”
“Of course I can, and I will. I just thought we could talk for a few minutes more
and get to know each other a little. I think people work best when they get to know each
other first and can be more open with each other, don’t you?”
“I suppose so,” she said in an uncertain voice, echoed by her uncertain eyes.
“Don’t you think employer and employee should be absolutely honest with each
other?”
“Yes.”
“I mean not just in professional matters, but in every aspect of their lives?”
“But wouldn’t their relationship just be a professional one?”
“Oh no, not at all. I guess that’s where I have a philosophical difference with you.
I believe much more in the Japanese system of running a business, where they treat each
other like family. And just as there shouldn’t be secrets in a happy family there shouldn’t
be any between employer and worker.”
Simone looked both confused and temporarily discouraged.
“Do you have any secrets from your family?” I asked her quickly in as normal
sounding a voice as I could manage considering I was almost trembling with excitement.
Immediately she looked away from me.
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“Some.”
“Some what?” I asked, wanting to hear her say the word.
“Some secrets.”
“And what are those secrets about?”
She looked down at the floor.
“I don’t feel comfortable talking about it.”
“Now, see, that’s just what I’m talking about,” I said, getting up from the couch
as if I’d had a revelation. I got up, but I didn’t go far. I had my best bottle of wine already
opened before I met her at the store. Beside the bottle were two wine glasses on a small,
circular glass table by the sofa.
“You definitely need another glass of wine. I’ve brought out my best.”
“Oh, no, Phil, I couldn’t.”
“But I’ve already opened it so you can’t say no.”
“Really I shouldn’t,” she said while I was already pouring for each of us.
“But why in heaven’s name not?”
“It will disrupt my thinking. Don’t you want me to think clearly?”
“I want you to be honest,” I said, handing her her drink. She thanked me for it, in
spite of herself. I reached out and gently pushed back a few strands of her hair that were
loose on her forehead. Her hair felt extraordinarily soft. After I did that her cheeks
reddened.
“I just feel confused about what you mean and what…”
“Drink,” I said authoritatively. “Drink it now.”
She took a swallow. “Couldn’t we start talking about the project now?”
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I ignored her remark and reaching into the pocket of my sports jacket removed my
wallet. “So Simone, did you enjoy the little gift I gave you yesterday?”
“I brought it back to give to you. It was very kind but…”
“What? Why would you do that? I told you that money was yours.”
“In case you changed your mind, I mean, I didn’t do anything to deserve it.”
“My dear child, you do everything to deserve it. I want to give you a lot more,
too,” I said, removing ten hundred dollar bills and putting them on the table.
“But I haven’t done anything yet, for the project.”
“We’ll get to that project. Right now the project I’m concerned with is Project
Honesty, and since we’re in a business relationship, I’m prepared to pay you for your
honesty. It works like this: the more honest you are the more I’ll pay you. That’s right,
now go on, finish the glass.”
“I don’t understand what you want me to be honest about,” she said, setting the
just finished glass down on the mahogany table near her where a candle was burning.
“The secret that you’re hiding from your family and probably from a lot of other
people too. I want you to tell me that story. Believe me, I still have a lot of secrets I keep
from my parents.”
She looked away without saying anything. “Is there anything else I could be
honest about instead,” she finally said.
I laughed. “Oh yes, indeed. As I said the more honest you are the more I’ll pay
you and you need money very badly don’t you?”
“Yes.”
“Because of your secret you really do need money. You see, I already think I
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know your secret, don’t I?”
“It’s not that much of a secret, at this point,” she said.
“No, no it isn’t. That’s why I’m surprised you don’t want to tell me about it. But I
tell you what, if you show me your secret I’ll pay you twice as much. That’s two
thousand dollars just to show me.”
“You don’t mean that, do you, Phil?”
I realized then I shouldn’t even tell her what option three was yet, for which I was
willing to pay considerably more.
“Yes, I do mean it. That’s how much honesty, your honesty, means to me. Look, I
understand some people have trouble talking about things so that’s why I’m also offering
you, for twice the money, the chance to simply show me where you won’t have to say a
word.”
“But that would mean I’d have to…”
“Yes, I know what it would mean but it would just be for a few seconds. You
think about it. You need money, desperately, and I’m offering you a lot. Not just today,
but if we work together I could pay for the whole thing.”
“No, I couldn’t,” she said, making a gesture to get up and leave.
“Couldn’t what? Show me, or let me pay for everything? Doesn’t matter, the
answer to either question is the same, yes you can. Just like the President says—yes you
can. That’s the answer.”
I took another thousand dollars out of my overstuffed wallet before she could
move and placed the money where she could see it on the table.
“So, what do you say?” I said. … “Why are you hesitating? Do you have
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someone?”
“I did,” Simone said, eyes on the floor again.
“Someone who was going to pay for things?”
“I thought I did.”
“Well now you have me, who really cares about you, to help you. Someone you
can count on a thousand percent.”
“I just can’t, really, I can’t.”
“Can’t?” I said. “Before you give me an answer like that, I want to tell you a story
from my life, ok? You could say I’m leading by example, if you want, by telling you the
ultimate secret of my life. It won’t take long so please, please listen.”
I went on to tell her the story of my son. I had never had a son or any other child
but I didn’t think she’d know I was lying. I’d told this story at other times in my life and
been believed and even told it to myself so much that at times even I half believed it,
myself. It was a story about raising my son as a single parent after his mother left me. A
story about extreme parental devotion to an emotionally troubled, but adorable, little boy
suffering from Asperger’s syndrome. I described the toys I bought him, all the games we
played and built. I described the daily stories we told for hours on end—stories about an
imaginary world we created filled with people and animals that we also made up. I
described how I cooked and cleaned for him and changed all his diapers. Then I told her
about the sixteen trips I took with him to places all over the world—London and Paris
and Argentina and Madrid, California and Washington D.C. and Chicago and Boston and
Florida. I mentioned how my devotion to my emotionally needy son cost me any chance
of a relationship with a woman and was ultimately the reason why the great love of my
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life walked away from me. But I also described how my son’s behavior improved, how
his temper tantrums turned instead to laughter, how he slowly developed into a joyful,
creative person who was finally able to feel and express empathy for others.
I saw how quickly and totally I got Simone’s attention with my story and saw
how each of the emotions she felt registered in unedited form on her soon to be woman’s
face. She had no problem feeling empathy. But now, it was time for my story’s
conclusion. This would be difficult. I had to describe how my son died, how he drowned
in Costa Rica the victim of a vicious, sudden rip tide that took him out to sea and buried
him in his beloved ocean. How had he escaped from my ever-vigilant eye? He had snuck
out early in the morning while I was sleeping (we were staying in a resort that was right
on the beach). It was his love of the sea that did it, that he couldn’t resist so he changed
into his bathing suit and tiptoed out of the room in the half-light of early morning drawn
by the little death flame of the rising sun before the lifeguard or anyone else was on the
hotel beach.
“Of course I was crazed with grief after it happened,” I said, “and considered
suicide many times after he died. But then I decided to try to help others, that that’s what
my son would have wanted. That it was therefore the only way my life could make sense
and be bearable.”
“Oh my God,” Simone said, finally placing her empty glass on the table, as if
she’d been afraid to make a sound during my long monologue. I thought I saw tears
sliding down her face.
“And now I’ve met you and want to help you. Do you see?”
“I’m just so sorry for you.”
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“Thank you,” I said, still feeling close to tears myself.
“When did that happen to him, to you?”
“A little more than a year ago. The anniversary of his death was just before
Halloween. He loved candlelight too. That’s why my home is full of candles.”
She started crying softly again.
“Please,” I said, “please stop crying. Could you just give me a hug?”
A moment later Simone was in my arms for the first time, though I thought it best
to release her after a few seconds. But Simone was still silently crying and stayed in my
arms of her own free will while I gently stroked her hair. Meanwhile, I had an unusual
train of thought. It began with my wondering why I was so shaken by the story and why,
when I told it, especially this time, did it almost seem true? Then I thought if I had had a
son that is the type of thing that would have happened. If I’d had a child I would have lost
it, the way I’d lost every person I’d ever loved, one way or another, to one degree or
another. Or perhaps that wasn’t it at all, and the story was about me and how I “lost” the
closeness with my father I once had when I was very young symbolized by my “son’s”
drowning. I didn’t know, I couldn’t be sure.
Whatever the reason I’d told it again, Simone was still in my arms and I heard
myself half whisper, “You can be my child, let me help you.”
Only then did she disengage and look at me with an expression of both
compassion and fear.
“How are you feeling?” I asked.
“My head is spinning.”
“Lie down on the sofa,” I said, suddenly getting up. “I’ll go get you some
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Tylenol.”
Simone didn’t look in good shape when I returned to the sofa. “Here, swallow
this,” I said, lowering the glass to her lips. I waited for her to swallow, hovering over her
in her yellow shirt and jeans, and then put the glass on the table by the sofa, a table now
completely covered with hundred dollar bills. I suddenly knew what to do next. I
gathered up the twenty hundred dollar bills in my hands.
“Sit up Simone, in fact stand up. You’ll feel better.”
She looked at me dizzily and almost passively and finally stood up grasping one
arm of the sofa to help steady herself.
“Here, this is yours,” I said, stuffing the money into her jean pockets before she
could protest or ever react. “Now you have twenty two hundred dollars towards helping
you get what you want.” I began unzipping her jeans.
“What are you doing?” she said weakly, as if it took all her strength to focus on
what was happening to her.
“Simone, you have taken my money, you have taken my heart. Don’t be so
precious to yourself. It will just make me happy for a few seconds, just to look at you, not
even to touch you. Come on, I thought you wanted to help me too?”
I’d now succeeded in unzipping her jeans and lowering them down her shaven
legs.
“But it’s not ready,” Simone protested. “It’s not pretty yet.”
I didn’t say anything to that. I simply lowered her pants below her knees, then did
the same to her delicately white panties until they were down as low and then looked at a
tilting to the left, but otherwise normal looking penis, normal except that all the public
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hair had been shaved.
Simone gasped then. It was almost a ghostly sound, horrified and restrained at the
same time, as she turned away to dress herself. I had hoped for something different of
course, from her and from what she showed me. Some surge of excitement instead of
piercing regret and sorrow.
Simone sobbed for just a few seconds, then stopped and concentrated on getting
dressed and out of my home as quickly as she could. When she was dressed and in
possession of her pocketbook and car keys she headed for the door accompanied by me.
“Simone,” I said, “I’m sorry if this hurt you.”
“It’s ok. You didn’t make me do it.”
“No, it’s not ok. I want to pay for your operation, no strings attached.”
“I don’t want anymore of your money, ever. I wish you wouldn’t come to the
store again either, except when you know I’m not there.”
“Only if you’ll promise to keep working there and you’ll see, good things will
happen. I will help you yet,” I said, half to myself as she shut the door and disappeared
into her car and then into the night.
* * *
You are outside in the dark but inside you have a house full of candles—a maze
of flickering, but constant light. With light it isn’t clear that you’d even need a god, you
could always just look ahead. But fire is different. Its flame reminds you of what you
can’t forget.
I walked through the maze of firelight to the glass table where my money had
once been by the sofa and where Simone had once been and in a sense would always be.
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Without hesitation, I put my thumb and index finger into the flame. It was pure and
strong like our father the sun and gave me the pain I deserved.
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